Citing Creative Commons Content

We are living a golden age of freely available and open content for you to reuse in your design projects. Photos, audio, PDFs, H5P, videos galore! But are you giving credit where credit is due? Are you reusing this content ethically and legally? Are you unsure?

Just because it’s available on the internet doesn’t mean it’s free to reuse as you wish. Unless your media of choice is clearly labeled as public domain or CC 0, you should be giving full attribution and following the terms that the creator has set for reuse. Don’t fall into the Fair Use trap. Very often, Fair Use is just an excuse to use media however you want.

In today’s post, I’m going to give you a quick overview of how to properly cite Creative Commons content. I’m not going to get into the nitty gritty of remixing content, those are posts for another day.

Lots of creators, myself included, are happy to share their work under a Creative Commons license but we still retain full copyright to the work, which means that if you use someone’s work in a way that the license doesn’t allow, you could be held legally responsible. Plus, it’s just kind to reuse media ethically!

If you are not familiar, Creative Commons is an international nonprofit organization that maintains a set of licenses that anyone can assign to their work to make it open and reusable by others.

In the United States, content creators automatically hold copyright to their own work, with no need to register with the U.S. Copyright Office or to label their work accordingly. Copyright, at its most simplistic, is exactly what it sounds like – the right to control copies made of the work. Any creator has the right to assign a Creative Commons license to their own work, which proactively notifies potential users of how they may or may not reuse it. No matter what kind of Creative Commons license a creator assigns to their work, the creator still retains copyright. That means that if a creator discovers someone reusing their work in a way not allowed by the license, they could take them to court and sue.

This may not be a big deal to you if you’re reusing content on a minor level, but if you are producing content for a public institution, or for a corporation, you are likely opening your client or employer to major legal problems without even knowing it.

How to Fully Attribute CC-Licensed Work

All Creative Commons licenses mandate attribution. It’s really simple to give full attribution to the creator of a work:

That’s it! Creator, Title, License, Link. I also like to cite any public domain work that I use, so that I remember where I got it and it’s OK to use, and also so that other people that see my work know they can reuse it.